U.S.
HIV
Cases
Worse
Than
Previously
Known
Officials
Say
Better
Tests,
Statistics
Are
Basis
For
New
Infections
Number
That
Is
40%
Higher
(AP) The
number
of
Americans
infected
by
the
AIDS
virus
each
year
is
much
higher
than
the
government
has
been
estimating,
U.S.
health
officials
are
expected
to
report
Sunday,
acknowledging
that
their
numbers
have
understated
the
level
of
the
epidemic.
The
country
had
roughly
56,300
new
HIV
infections
in
2006
-
a
dramatic
increase
from
the
40,000
annual
estimate
used
for
the
last
dozen
years.
The
new
figure
is
due
to
a
better
blood
test
and
new
statistical
methods,
and
not
a
worsening
of
the
epidemic,
officials
said.
But
it
likely
will
refocus
U.S.
attention
from
the
effect
of
AIDS
overseas
to
what
the
disease
is
doing
to
this
country,
said
public
health
researchers
and
officials.
"This
is
the
biggest
news
for
public
health
and
HIV/AIDS
that
we've
had
in
a
while,"
said
Julie
Scofield,
executive
director
of
the
National
Alliance
of
State
and
Territorial
AIDS
Directors.
The
revised
estimate
by
the
Centers
for
Disease
Control
and
Prevention
and
the
methodology
behind
it
were
to
be
presented
Sunday,
the
opening
day
of
the
international
AIDS
conference
in
Mexico
City.
Since
AIDS
first
surfaced
in
1981,
health
officials
have
struggled
to
estimate
how
many
people
are
infected
each
year.
It
can
take
a
decade
or
more
for
an
infection
to
cause
symptoms
and
illness.
One
expert
likened
the
new
estimate
to
adding
a
good
speedometer
to
a
car.
Scientists
had
a
good
general
idea
of
where
the
epidemic
was
going;
this
provides
a
better
understanding
of
how
fast
it's
moving
right
now.
"This
puts
a
key
part
of
the
dashboard
in
place,"
said
the
expert,
David
Holtgrave
of
Johns
Hopkins
University.
Based
on
the
new
calculations,
officials
believe
annual
HIV
infections
have
been
hovering
around
55,000
for
several
years.
"This
is
the
most
reliable
estimate
we've
had
since
the
beginning
of
the
epidemic,"
said
Dr.
Julie
Gerberding,
the
CDC's
director.
She
said
other
countries
may
adopt
the
agency's
methodology.
According
to
current
estimates,
around
1.1
million
Americans
are
living
with
the
AIDS
virus.
Officials
plan
to
update
that
number
with
the
new
calculations,
but
don't
think
it
will
change
dramatically,
a
CDC
spokeswoman
said.
The
new
infection
estimate
is
based
on
a
blood
test
that
for
the
first
time
can
tell
how
recently
an
HIV
infection
occurred.
Fast
Fact
CDC
estimates
that
one-quarter
of
HIV-infected
people
are
unaware
of
their
HIV
infection
and
that
these
persons
account
for
more
than
half
of
all
new
infections.
Past
tests
could
only
detect
the
presence
of
HIV,
so
determining
which
year
an
infection
took
place
was
guesswork
-
guesswork
upon
which
the
old
40,000
estimate
was
based.
The
new
estimate
relies
on
blood
tests
from
22
states
where
health
officials
have
been
using
a
new
HIV
testing
method
that
can
distinguish
infections
that
occurred
within
the
last
five
months
from
those
that
were
older.
The
improved
science
will
allow
more
real-time
monitoring
of
HIV
infections.
Now,
CDC
officials
say,
the
estimate
will
likely
be
updated
every
year.
Yearly
estimates
allow
better
recognition
of
trends
in
the
U.S.
epidemic.
For
example,
the
new
report
found
that
infections
are
falling
among
heterosexuals
and
injection
drug
users.
Some
experts
celebrated
that
finding,
saying
it's
a
tribute
to
prevention
efforts,
including
nearly
200
syringe
exchange
programs
now
operating
in
36
states
despite
a
federal
ban
on
funding
for
such
projects.
But
they
also
lamented
the
CDC's
finding
that
infections
continue
to
increase
in
gay
and
bisexual
men,
who
accounted
for
more
than
half
of
HIV
infections
in
2006.
Also,
more
than
a
third
of
those
with
HIV
are
younger
than
30.
Some
advocates
say
that
suggests
a
need
for
more
prevention
efforts,
particularly
targeting
younger
gay
and
bisexual
men.
For
years,
AIDS
was
considered
a
terrifying
death
sentence,
and
since
1981,
more
than
half
a
million
Americans
have
died.
But
medicines
that
became
available
in
the
1990s
turned
it
into
a
manageable
chronic
condition
for
many
Americans,
and
attention
shifted
to
Africa
and
other
parts
of
the
world.